D
Della
Guest
Whereas you don’t? After the dismissive things you just wrote about Evangelicals/those who identify themselves merely as Christian?I think this helps to actually illustrate Peter J’s point.*** It is not more extreme for a Catholic to insist on being called “Christian.” Catholics are the biggest Christian group and comprise about 50% of all Christians. If you put the names of every Christian in a bowl and randomly pick one out, the most likely result is that you will pick a Catholic’s name. Yet, most people that simply identify as “Christian” see a Catholic identifying as only “Christian” as more extreme, because they have an underlying assumption that Catholicism is not really Christian to the full extent that Protestantism is. There is a certain dismissiveness in that assumption that can be arguably called “extreme.”
From my own personal experience**, when someone insists on just being called “Christian,” the following assumption are accurate most of the time:
*I suspect this last point is often the real reason most people eschew denominational labels. It means they might need to know something about theology. It is much easy to just say “Christian,” then not have to know anything too difficult for a middle schooler to grasp.
- their beliefs fall within the boundaries of what is generally recognised as Evangelical Protestantism;
- they are wary of Catholicism and High Church Protestantism, because those people “don’t seem very Christian;”
- they have a very poor grasp of history, and often care little about it;
- they have a poor understanding of theology, so it probably doesn’t make to sense to claim allegiance to a specific church anyway, because they probably couldn’t be bothered to learn what they are supposed to believe.*
** For the sake of full disclosure, my personal experience consists of about two decades as a Protestant and seven years as an Orthodox Christian.
***It illustrates it because those just identifying as Catholic do necessarily have comparably dismissive and sectarian assumptions.